Asked about his reaction to the city's homicide rate, Hogan discussed gang violence and the city's drug problem, then discussed the protesters following the death of Freddie Gray.

"I express my concern that we have a lot of people out there expressing their concern and frustration over the tragic death of Freddie Gray, but where's the uproar in the community, where's the frustration over the 300 people murdered?"

Baltimore's homicide rate Wednesday stood at 328. Scott, however, quickly responded on Twitter with a picture of a demonstration at Penn-North that he said was taken several days after Gray died. Several dozen people held signs saying, "We must stop killing each other."

While Scott said he and Hogan agree Baltimore has a problem with gun violence, he said it was "disrespectful" to claim nobody in the city is as concerned about it as they are about Gray's death and associated police issues.

"We need more people, but we can't act like it's no one, like no one cares," Scott tole Bryan Nehman on Maryland's Morning News Wednesday. "Both the issues of police brutality and reform and community violence are equally important to the city of Baltimore."